Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up
Odds by

Rotoworld

  • SF Relief Pitcher #64
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Giants designated RHP Sean Hjelle for assignment.
    San Francisco is moving on from Hjelle after he posted a disastrous 7.80 ERA across 15 innings (12 appearances, one start) this season in the big leagues.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #32
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Rockies’ manager Warren Schaeffer told reporters after Thursday’s game that Chase Dollander was removed due to general arm tightness.
    When asked whether or not he thought that Dollander experienced a drop in velocity during the outing, he simply said, “maybe”. Expect Dollander to undergo a full MRI to determine exactly what’s going on there. It would be surprising if he didn’t wind up on the injured list before the weekend is through.
    Raleigh worth keeping on rosters while on IL
    Eric Samulski talks about Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh's injury and how fantasy managers should approach his absence.
  • STL Relief Pitcher #70
    Cardinals LHP Packy Naughton will have elbow surgery next week.
    It’s a tough break for those of us in fantasy leagues where everyone’s name must sound like a 1920s street gangster. Naughton had been attempting a comeback after forearm surgery — obviously that’s in some question at this point as the 30-year-old had a 3.86 ERA in three games with Triple-A Memphis.
  • NYM Center Fielder
    A.J. Ewing went 2-for-4 with his first career homer as the Mets came back to beat the Tigers 9-4 on Thursday.
    Ewing lined the solo shot into the right field bullpen at Citi Field, and he’s off to a .333/.538/.889 start with four walks in his first 13 plate appearances and a stolen base. So that’s not bad. We wouldn’t bet on Ewing being a major power source for the Mets given his size and minor league track record, but he certainly gave them a jolt as they swept the Tigers. Snap him up if he wasn’t already picked up in your league.
  • DET 3rd Baseman #41
    Gage Workman went 2-for-4 with a three-run homer as the Tigers fell to the Mets on Thursday.
    He added another double in this game, though he was stranded, and now has four extra-base hits in his first four games this year, including two homers. The Tigers batted him fifth today. We don’t recommend a shallow-league preemptive pickup, but deep league managers should definitely circle around to make sure nobody left him on the waiver wire with this hot start.
  • NYM Left Fielder #22
    Juan Soto went 2-for-5 with a solo home run and an RBI single in New York’s win over the Tigers on Thursday.
    Sounds like his ankle’s going to be okay. It hasn’t been the best start for Soto in fantasy leagues between the IL stint, the end of last year’s stolen base reign, and a ton of groundball outs. Still, he’s hitting .269/.358/.471 with five homers. As long as he stays healthy, fantasy managers should be pleased this summer.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #54
    Keider Montero gave up four earned runs in 4 2/3 innings against the Mets on Thursday.
    Montero was pulled with a man on and two out in the fifth, so he had a front row seat as Tyler Holton allowed a go-ahead single to Juan Soto and a two-run bomb to Mark Vientos to put him on the hook for a loss. Montero’s just not missing enough bats -- he got only one whiff on 31 swings from the Mets today. He’ll be lined up with another streamable-in-theory start against the Guardians next week, but nothing we’ve seen has us itching to start him in shallow leagues.
  • NYM Starting Pitcher #26
    Nolan McLean pitched seven innings against the Tigers on Thursday, allowing three earned runs and striking out seven.
    All three of the runs scored in the first courtesy of a Gage Workman homer that barely scraped past the left-field wall at Citi Field. McLean did allow eight hard-hit balls -- six off his main fastballs -- and his velocity was down a bit. It speaks well of him and his arsenal that he was able to go seven and strike out seven despite that. He’ll continue to be a must-start as he takes on the Nationals next week.
  • PIT Shortstop #85
    Konnor Griffin went 2-for-4 with a run scored and a stolen base in Pittsburgh’s win over the Rockies on Thursday.
    Griffin’s now hitting .304/.365/.500 in 51 plate appearances in May, with one homer and three stolen bases. It’s not quite as spicy of a line as we’d hoped just yet, but he’s definitely getting adjusted to big-league pitching. He’s raised his average from .231 to .254 in the process. Fantasy managers banking on him have to be thrilled that he’s quickly adjusting; hopefully the ceiling results can come over the rest of the summer.
  • COL 1st Baseman #20
    Troy Johnston went 1-for-3 with a two-RBI double against the Pirates on Thursday.
    It was the only scoring the Rockies could muster against a pair of openers and Carmen Mlodzinski. Johnston managed to misplay a Spencer Horowitz fly ball that he thought would carom off the wall but instead landed on the track after he’d already stopped. So it goes. Johnston still qualifies as a success story for the Rockies, he’s up to a .326/.387/.465 seasonal line with two homers.
  • PIT Right Fielder #29
    Ryan O’Hearn went 3-for-4 with a home run, two runs scored, and two RBI in Pittsburgh’s 7-2 win over the Rockies.
    That’s eight hits in five games for O’Hearn, who took a Chase Dollander fastball over the plate deep to dead center. The Pirates have gotten what they’ve paid for so far, as O’Hearn has been a respectable middle-of-the-order hitter and has even managed an empty .295 average against left-handed pitching coming into today’s game.